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ESTA/WVP - leaving US within 90 days, then staying in DR


Leaving the States on Visa Waiver and coming backGetting a B-2 Visa two months after staying 90 days in the USLeave the US permanently 60 days then fly back to Mexico for a month before reenter US, is it possible?Entered USA with esta, leaving to Canada for 2 days and come backCanadian citizen traveling to USA on British Passport using ESTAIs my airport transit ESTA exceeded by staying in Canada for 6 months? Can I travel back to USA?Can I enter Mexico by land and go back to the US with an esta?When entering the US on VWP, are you required to have proof of onward travel within the 90 days?Applying for EstaESTA reentry to USA after very brief initial stay in NYC. (2 weeks NYC, 2 months Canada, 2 months USA)






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








4















My situation is as following:



I plan to visit NY for 2 weeks (with a valid refundable ticket back to germany as an "onward" ticket), then fly to the Dominican Republic (DR) for 2 weeks, return once more to NY for 1 week and afterwards leace the US for 3 months to DR (from where I then plan to fly to germany).



My flight back from DR to Germany would surpass the 90 day ESTA-limit. However, I do not plan on reentering the US after going to DR for 3 months, but flying to Germany (where I`m from).



As I couldn't find information online I'm asking myself: Will there be any problem trying to reenter the US at some point in the future if I leave the DR after the 90 day limit? (the way I understood ESTA it shouldn't, only reentering the US should be a problem as the days in the DR are counted within the 90day mark).



Thanks in advance










share|improve this question









New contributor



Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.














  • 3





    Just to check: when you travel from the DR to Germany, does your flight have a layover in the US? If so, then you will be re-entering the US at that time (briefly) since the US does not have sterile international transit.

    – Nate Eldredge
    May 26 at 14:15











  • no my flight will be without stops directly to germany.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:21

















4















My situation is as following:



I plan to visit NY for 2 weeks (with a valid refundable ticket back to germany as an "onward" ticket), then fly to the Dominican Republic (DR) for 2 weeks, return once more to NY for 1 week and afterwards leace the US for 3 months to DR (from where I then plan to fly to germany).



My flight back from DR to Germany would surpass the 90 day ESTA-limit. However, I do not plan on reentering the US after going to DR for 3 months, but flying to Germany (where I`m from).



As I couldn't find information online I'm asking myself: Will there be any problem trying to reenter the US at some point in the future if I leave the DR after the 90 day limit? (the way I understood ESTA it shouldn't, only reentering the US should be a problem as the days in the DR are counted within the 90day mark).



Thanks in advance










share|improve this question









New contributor



Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.














  • 3





    Just to check: when you travel from the DR to Germany, does your flight have a layover in the US? If so, then you will be re-entering the US at that time (briefly) since the US does not have sterile international transit.

    – Nate Eldredge
    May 26 at 14:15











  • no my flight will be without stops directly to germany.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:21













4












4








4


1






My situation is as following:



I plan to visit NY for 2 weeks (with a valid refundable ticket back to germany as an "onward" ticket), then fly to the Dominican Republic (DR) for 2 weeks, return once more to NY for 1 week and afterwards leace the US for 3 months to DR (from where I then plan to fly to germany).



My flight back from DR to Germany would surpass the 90 day ESTA-limit. However, I do not plan on reentering the US after going to DR for 3 months, but flying to Germany (where I`m from).



As I couldn't find information online I'm asking myself: Will there be any problem trying to reenter the US at some point in the future if I leave the DR after the 90 day limit? (the way I understood ESTA it shouldn't, only reentering the US should be a problem as the days in the DR are counted within the 90day mark).



Thanks in advance










share|improve this question









New contributor



Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











My situation is as following:



I plan to visit NY for 2 weeks (with a valid refundable ticket back to germany as an "onward" ticket), then fly to the Dominican Republic (DR) for 2 weeks, return once more to NY for 1 week and afterwards leace the US for 3 months to DR (from where I then plan to fly to germany).



My flight back from DR to Germany would surpass the 90 day ESTA-limit. However, I do not plan on reentering the US after going to DR for 3 months, but flying to Germany (where I`m from).



As I couldn't find information online I'm asking myself: Will there be any problem trying to reenter the US at some point in the future if I leave the DR after the 90 day limit? (the way I understood ESTA it shouldn't, only reentering the US should be a problem as the days in the DR are counted within the 90day mark).



Thanks in advance







usa esta us-visa-waiver-program dominican-republic






share|improve this question









New contributor



Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









New contributor



Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 26 at 14:23









Nate Eldredge

26.1k991115




26.1k991115






New contributor



Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked May 26 at 13:14









Traveler 21Traveler 21

232




232




New contributor



Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




New contributor




Traveler 21 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









  • 3





    Just to check: when you travel from the DR to Germany, does your flight have a layover in the US? If so, then you will be re-entering the US at that time (briefly) since the US does not have sterile international transit.

    – Nate Eldredge
    May 26 at 14:15











  • no my flight will be without stops directly to germany.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:21












  • 3





    Just to check: when you travel from the DR to Germany, does your flight have a layover in the US? If so, then you will be re-entering the US at that time (briefly) since the US does not have sterile international transit.

    – Nate Eldredge
    May 26 at 14:15











  • no my flight will be without stops directly to germany.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:21







3




3





Just to check: when you travel from the DR to Germany, does your flight have a layover in the US? If so, then you will be re-entering the US at that time (briefly) since the US does not have sterile international transit.

– Nate Eldredge
May 26 at 14:15





Just to check: when you travel from the DR to Germany, does your flight have a layover in the US? If so, then you will be re-entering the US at that time (briefly) since the US does not have sterile international transit.

– Nate Eldredge
May 26 at 14:15













no my flight will be without stops directly to germany.

– Traveler 21
May 28 at 6:21





no my flight will be without stops directly to germany.

– Traveler 21
May 28 at 6:21










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5














The "neighboring countries" clause in the Visa Waiver Program is intended as a way of stopping people from doing "visa runs" to neighboring countries to re-start their Visa Waiver clock.



In your case you are clearly not visiting the DR as a "visa run", so you will not have any issues at all.



In practice, presuming you are leaving the US by air, then when you travel from the US to the DR you will be deemed to have left the US.



On your return to the US, the immigration staff will see your prior visit, and have the ability to basically "re-open" your previous stay, meaning you previous 90 day period will continue - giving you ~2 months further legal status in the US. (In practice they are just as likely to treat you as a new entrant and give you another 90 days, but either way will work for you in this case)



When you leave the US the second time you will once again be deemed to have left the US. As you have no plans to re-enter from the DR, then that is treated as your final exit date from the US on this visit.






share|improve this answer























  • thank you very much. this was very helpful.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:22











Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














The "neighboring countries" clause in the Visa Waiver Program is intended as a way of stopping people from doing "visa runs" to neighboring countries to re-start their Visa Waiver clock.



In your case you are clearly not visiting the DR as a "visa run", so you will not have any issues at all.



In practice, presuming you are leaving the US by air, then when you travel from the US to the DR you will be deemed to have left the US.



On your return to the US, the immigration staff will see your prior visit, and have the ability to basically "re-open" your previous stay, meaning you previous 90 day period will continue - giving you ~2 months further legal status in the US. (In practice they are just as likely to treat you as a new entrant and give you another 90 days, but either way will work for you in this case)



When you leave the US the second time you will once again be deemed to have left the US. As you have no plans to re-enter from the DR, then that is treated as your final exit date from the US on this visit.






share|improve this answer























  • thank you very much. this was very helpful.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:22















5














The "neighboring countries" clause in the Visa Waiver Program is intended as a way of stopping people from doing "visa runs" to neighboring countries to re-start their Visa Waiver clock.



In your case you are clearly not visiting the DR as a "visa run", so you will not have any issues at all.



In practice, presuming you are leaving the US by air, then when you travel from the US to the DR you will be deemed to have left the US.



On your return to the US, the immigration staff will see your prior visit, and have the ability to basically "re-open" your previous stay, meaning you previous 90 day period will continue - giving you ~2 months further legal status in the US. (In practice they are just as likely to treat you as a new entrant and give you another 90 days, but either way will work for you in this case)



When you leave the US the second time you will once again be deemed to have left the US. As you have no plans to re-enter from the DR, then that is treated as your final exit date from the US on this visit.






share|improve this answer























  • thank you very much. this was very helpful.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:22













5












5








5







The "neighboring countries" clause in the Visa Waiver Program is intended as a way of stopping people from doing "visa runs" to neighboring countries to re-start their Visa Waiver clock.



In your case you are clearly not visiting the DR as a "visa run", so you will not have any issues at all.



In practice, presuming you are leaving the US by air, then when you travel from the US to the DR you will be deemed to have left the US.



On your return to the US, the immigration staff will see your prior visit, and have the ability to basically "re-open" your previous stay, meaning you previous 90 day period will continue - giving you ~2 months further legal status in the US. (In practice they are just as likely to treat you as a new entrant and give you another 90 days, but either way will work for you in this case)



When you leave the US the second time you will once again be deemed to have left the US. As you have no plans to re-enter from the DR, then that is treated as your final exit date from the US on this visit.






share|improve this answer













The "neighboring countries" clause in the Visa Waiver Program is intended as a way of stopping people from doing "visa runs" to neighboring countries to re-start their Visa Waiver clock.



In your case you are clearly not visiting the DR as a "visa run", so you will not have any issues at all.



In practice, presuming you are leaving the US by air, then when you travel from the US to the DR you will be deemed to have left the US.



On your return to the US, the immigration staff will see your prior visit, and have the ability to basically "re-open" your previous stay, meaning you previous 90 day period will continue - giving you ~2 months further legal status in the US. (In practice they are just as likely to treat you as a new entrant and give you another 90 days, but either way will work for you in this case)



When you leave the US the second time you will once again be deemed to have left the US. As you have no plans to re-enter from the DR, then that is treated as your final exit date from the US on this visit.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered May 26 at 15:09









DocDoc

78.6k5181288




78.6k5181288












  • thank you very much. this was very helpful.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:22

















  • thank you very much. this was very helpful.

    – Traveler 21
    May 28 at 6:22
















thank you very much. this was very helpful.

– Traveler 21
May 28 at 6:22





thank you very much. this was very helpful.

– Traveler 21
May 28 at 6:22










Traveler 21 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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